'US missiles' hit Pakistani town

At least five people are killed in overnight attack, security officials say.

19 Nov 2008 14:09 GMT

The missile attack targeted a house in the town of Jani Khel in North West Frontier province [Reuters]

Pakistani officials said the missiles were launched from Afghanistan, where at least 32,000 US troops are fighting the Taliban and other fighters.

Stoking anger

Officials also said that several other people were wounded in the attack in Jani Khel, a town in the northwestern district of Bannu just outside the tribal areas where al-Qada and Taliban fighters have found refuge in recent years.

Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder in Islamabad said that locals believe that the US was involved in the attack, which comes at a time when "...the Pakistani military chief was visiting Brussels to brief Nato commanders on his country's apprehensions regarding drone attacks that are shifting public opinion against the US and Pakistani government".

"There was a report recently in the Washington Post that the Americans had a tacit agreement that they would be able to use Pakistani airspace wherever they thought there were targets," Hyder reported.

"While the government has been denying that there has been any secret agreement with the Americans, they have not been able to come out with a formula to stop such attacks, and that is likely to cause considerable anger within Pakistan because its own military forces are not in a position to defend its citizens within its territory."

US 'blamed'

The US has been blamed for at least 20 missile attacks and a ground assault in northwest Pakistan since mid-August.

Meanwhile, all the attacks since August have been in villages in north and south Waziristan, two semi-autonomous tribal regions where the government has a very limited presence.

Islamabad has protested over the raids, saying they are a violation of the country's sovereignty.

US officers in Afghanistan have stressed improved Pakistani co-operation in squeezing fighters nested along the border.

Colonel John Spiszer, the US commander in northeast Afghanistan, said that pressure on Aghanistan and Pakistan will eventually mean that fighters will be "running out of options on places to go".

But Pakistani officials said the US missile strikes are counterproductive because they often kill civilians and deepen anti-US and anti-government sentiment.

However, General David Petraeus, the US chief commander, defended the raids, saying at least three senior fighters, whom he did not identify, have been killed in recent months in the attacks.